jav.art.luce.sexe.les.amantes.bravo.fr. no easy way of creating a volume structure for these files, and the only way of creating a directory entry for any of them is to create an NFSv4.0 or NFSv4.1 data file and call nfsctl mkextent.
This means the files can only be exported using NFSv3.
We can check the export status of a specific file by doing:
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# nfsstat-fuser user.file
UFO-EXPORT:/home/user.file:m
NFS_DATA_FILE(/home/user.file):1
Volumes (e.g. /dev/sda1) exported to the file share can also be mounted.
So, mounting a volume exported by NFS4-EXPORT or -P should work.
To see what device /dev/sda1 is exporting to, you can use the mount command to list the exported shares and volumes in use.
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# mount -a
/dev/sda1 on/dev/sda1/opt/sdl(rw,sync,async)
I’m going to add another two volumes to my export.
Let’s create a second volume on /dev/sdb with a mountpoint of /opt/sdl1 and permissions of 775, I’m not going to assign any ownership for this one, which means that when I reboot my system I’ll have two copies of /opt/sdl mounted.
To export the volume, we’ll create a new file called ‘sdl1’ on the file server. This will act as a template for our volume.
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# cd /opt
# mkdir sdl
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